
Budgeting & Debt
5 min read
- By Saumya Mishra
Home Loan Prepayment: Tenure Reduction vs EMI Reduction
You have Rs. 8 lakh surplus and a Rs. 45 lakh home loan at 9.1%. Conventional wisdom says prepay. Conventional wisdom ignores the tax deduction on interest (saved ~3% effective) and the opportunity cost of not investing. The prepayment decision depends on three numbers: effective post-tax loan rate, expected investment return, and which stage of the loan you are in. For a 30%-slab borrower in year 5 of a 20-year loan: effective rate ~6.4%, equity return ~11%. Investing wins by 4-5 percentage points.
By the end, you will know when prepayment beats investing, the two loan stages where prepayment always wins, and the tenure-vs-EMI reduction choice on partial prepayment.
The three numbers
- EFFECTIVE LOAN RATE = interest rate - (tax deduction benefit). For a 30% slab borrower claiming Rs. 2L section 24(b) interest deduction: 9.1% - 2.7% = ~6.4% effective.
- EXPECTED INVESTMENT RETURN: equity long-term ~11%, debt / hybrid ~7-9%. Choose based on horizon and risk tolerance.
- LOAN STAGE: early years are interest-heavy (prepay shines. Saves cumulative interest); last 5 years are principal-heavy (prepay matters less, most of the interest burden is behind).
The decision framework: if effective rate > expected return, prepay. If effective rate < expected return, invest the surplus. For most middle-class 30%-slab borrowers with 10+ years remaining, investing in equity beats prepayment mathematically. Behavioural factor: some people sleep better debt-free; that peace of mind has real value even when the math says invest.
When prepayment clearly wins
- You are > 20 YEARS into the loan (tax deduction diminishing as interest component shrinks).
- Effective rate > expected return (e.g., 8% loan vs 7% debt-only alternative. Prepay).
- You are PSYCHOLOGICALLY averse to debt. A real factor, not a rationalisation.
- You have already maxed out tax-advantaged investments (ELSS, NPS, PPF) and prepayment is the next best use.
Tenure-reduction vs EMI-reduction
When you partial-prepay a home loan, the bank offers two choices: (a) REDUCE EMI (frees monthly cash flow, same tenure) or (b) REDUCE TENURE (same EMI, shorter loan). Tenure-reduction saves MORE in absolute interest because the loan compounds for fewer months. For a Rs. 5 lakh prepayment on a Rs. 40 lakh, 15-year remaining loan at 9%: tenure-reduction saves ~Rs. 8.5 lakh total interest vs EMI-reduction saving ~Rs. 5 lakh. The liquidity trade-off: EMI-reduction gives you monthly breathing room; tenure-reduction commits you to current EMI for shorter period.
Banks default to EMI-reduction unless you specify. Explicitly request tenure-reduction at prepayment for maximum interest savings. Some banks charge a nominal prepayment processing fee (Rs. 500-2,000) for tenure-reduction; others are free. Always ask.
Partial prepayment + tenure reduction vs EMI reduction
Partial prepayment + tenure reduction vs EMI reduction
Never prepay before building emergency fund
Floating vs fixed rate consideration
Key Takeaways
- Compare effective rate (post-tax-saving) vs expected investment return.
- Early-stage prepayment saves more than late-stage (interest-heavy years).
- Tenure-reduction > EMI-reduction for absolute interest saved.
- Behavioural: debt-free psychology is a valid factor.
- Never prepay before building 6-12 months emergency fund.
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